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2. 1885-1890 | The University Building at Keizersgracht 162

 University Building Keizersgracht 162, around 1940, Black-and-white photograph.

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1885-1890 | The University Building at Keizersgracht 162

For a long time, the building at Keizersgracht 162 and neighbouring buildings were the focal point of university life. Until the move to the new campus in 1966, the faculties of Theology, Law and Arts, the university administration and the university library were all housed here. But a university building, and especially the library, is more than just a place to work and study. This was true back then, and it’s certainly still true today. Harm Derks of the University Library explains how they cultivate the right atmosphere on the campus nowadays.

The old university building

In the first few years of its existence, VU Amsterdam did not have its own accommodation. In December 1883, the board of the university, the directors of the ‘Vereeniging voor Hooger Onderwijs op Gereformeerden Grondslag’ [Association for Higher Education on Reformed Principles] (now: VUvereniging), took action with the purchase of the 1615 canal house for 41,000 guilders. After a thorough renovation, the building housed its initial classes on 1 February 1884. A new façade was erected, which henceforth displayed the text ‘Vrije Universiteit’ and ‘Anno 1884’. Further confirmation of its use as a university building was provided by a wooden emblem with the VU Amsterdam seal, the ‘Virgin in the Garden’, placed over the entrance. The topmost floor lodged students in what was called the Hospitium.

Plenty of space was available back then, as there were very few students at VU Amsterdam during its early days (five in 1880 and 125 around 1900). However, as the university saw strong growth at the start of the 20th century, the previously acquired premises at Nr 164 were integrated with Nr 162 in 1923. Internal renovation resulted in a shared attic, among other things, for the library. The next purchase was Nr 166 in 1930. At that point, VU Amsterdam was home to around 500 students (still few when compared with the 2,200 students at the University of Amsterdam). The historical buildings became increasingly cramped as the student numbers almost exceeded the capacity of the narrow staircases.

Founded in 1930, the Faculty of Sciences had a new laboratory built at De Lairessestraat, in the south of Amsterdam. Further premises across the city were acquired for other new programmes, including at Koningslaan and Prins Hendriklaan. At the same time, the main building continued to be expanded: the premises at Nr 160 were acquired in 1954 to increase the size of the library. Nr 166 underwent a thorough renovation and gained two additional floors in this year as well. Internal corridors connected all of the premises. The university also commissioned the neighbouring premises at Nrs 158 and 168 in 1962.

The university devised a plan to move an increasing number of departments to its new campus in Buitenveldert from the 1950s. It eventually sold the Keizersgracht premises in 1966. The range of Hospitiums that served as student accommodation migrated to the Uilenstede student centre in Amstelveen. It was not until in the 1990s that all faculties and departments were gathered around the new campus.

Heritage that reminds us of the old university locations is curated by the University Library, and some of this heritage has found a new permanent place on the campus. The most visible item is the emblem with the university seal, which following the relocation was incorporated in the lectern at the front of the Aula. But the heritage elements remind us of the past in other places, too, such as the library – and in this way they help to create an academic working environment, a sense of connection with the university and can serve to link the past with contemporary research and teaching.

Study places, meeting spots

Harm Derks

The current University Library – housed on all floors of the B Tower of the Main Building and in VUmc – is not only a place where books, collections and archives are consulted and borrowed: it offers many study places as well. The University Library is also co-responsible for study places at other locations on the campus, together with other service departments and in co-creation with students.

The University Library aims to create a lively atmosphere both on the campus and online, a place where academic research is visible and tangible, where you can find what you’re looking for, or encounter what you didn’t yet know existed. A place everyone likes to come in order to share knowledge, and where everyone can rest assured that research results are managed well, stored safely and made readily accessible and easy to find. A place where you can feel the buzz of the university. Where everyone feels at home. The university’s heart beats in the library: this is where we go for inspiration, to build on what already exists and to explore how even more can be created out of this.

Driven by these goals, in recent years we have set up a research room for classical languages, with books literally close at hand, and the second floor of the Main Building has been furnished as a ‘living room’ with a ‘Plant Hotel’, sleeping pods, art and heritage – a place where in-depth activities are organised, and also a venue for silent discos arranged for and by students.

One project for the future is Omboeken (‘Re-booking’): students like to surround themselves physically with books – but our books are shelved in stores and many of them are never lent out, or only very rarely. We are assessing which books are no longer relevant in terms of content as they are now permanently available in digital form or outdated. This part of the collection, which no longer offers added value in terms of content (while remaining available elsewhere in the Netherlands), will then be removed from the stores and used to create a special atmosphere for the study rooms and meeting spots: the books will be used as building blocks or as raw material for book-based artworks, for furniture or as inspiring sound insulation.

We will also start deploying books as a source of inspiration, setting up open bookshelves based on themes that can offer our users different perspectives, in collaboration with partners such as VU Pride, Black Archives, The Green Office and A Broader Mind. In this way we aim not only to provide in-depth opportunities but also to create connections and promote spontaneous encounters.

Harm Derks is the Manager of Library Services.

 Wooden shield with the emblem of ‘the virgin in the garden’ above the entrance at the Keizersgracht 162.  Interior of the University Library, VU Main Building, second floor, 2021.

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